Bioethics
Related Category: Medicine
in philosophy, a branch of
ethics concerned with issues surrounding health care and the biological sciences. These issues include the morality of
abortion,
euthanasia,
in vitro fertilization, and organ transplants (see
transplantation, medical). In the 1970s bioethics emerged as a discipline with its own experts, often professional philosophers, who developed university courses on the subject. Many hospitals now employ experts on bioethics to advise on such issues as how to treat terminally ill patients and to allocate limited resources. Advances in health care, the development of
genetic screening, and the new research in
genetic engineering, including
gene therapy, have also given rise to questions in bioethics.
See W. T. Reich, ed., Encyclopedia of Bioethics (4 vol., 1978); H. T. Engelhardt, The Foundations of Bioethics (1986); R. Macklin, Mortal Choices: Bioethics in Today's World (1987).